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  attractor attribution  
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   The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition.  2000.
 
attribute
 
SYLLABICATION:at·trib·ute
PRONUNCIATION:  -trbyt
TRANSITIVE VERB:Inflected forms: at·trib·ut·ed, at·trib·ut·ing, at·trib·utes
1. To relate to a particular cause or source; ascribe: attributed their failure to a lack of preparation. 2. To regard as the work of a specified agent, place, or time: attributed the painting to Titian; attributed the vase to 18th-century Japan.
NOUN:at·tri·bute (tr-byt) 1. A quality or characteristic inherent in or ascribed to someone or something. 2. An object associated with and serving to identify a character, personage, or office: Lightning bolts are an attribute of Zeus. 3. Grammar A word or phrase syntactically subordinate to another word or phrase that it modifies; for example, my sister's and brown in my sister's brown dog.
ETYMOLOGY:Latin attribuere, attribt- : ad-, ad- + tribuere, to allot; see tribute.
OTHER FORMS:at·tribut·a·bleADJECTIVE
at·tribut·er, at·tribu·torNOUN
SYNONYMS:attribute, ascribe, impute, credit, assign, refer These verbs mean to consider as resulting from or belonging to a person or thing. Attribute and ascribe, often interchangeable, have the widest application: The historian discovered a new symphony attributed to Mozart. The museum displayed an invention ascribed to the 15th century. Impute is often used in laying guilt or fault to another: “We usually ascribe good; but impute evil” (Samuel Johnson). Credit frequently applies to an accomplishment or virtue: “Some excellent remarks were made on immortality, but mainly borrowed from and credited to Plato” (Oliver Wendell Holmes, Sr.). Assign and refer are often used to classify or categorize: Program music as a genre is usually assigned to the Romantic period. “A person thus prepared will be able to refer any particular history he takes up to its proper place in universal history” (Joseph Priestley).See also synonyms at quality.
 
 
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition. Copyright © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by the Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.

CONTENTS · INDEX · ILLUSTRATIONS · BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
  attractor attribution  
 
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